Chrishayden AALBC .com Platinum Poster Username: Chrishayden
Post Number: 2916 Registered: 03-2004
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | Posted on Wednesday, November 01, 2006 - 11:19 am: |
|
The following review will appear in the Kwanzaa 2006 edition of Sisters Nineties magazine Not Yer Granddaddy's Funny book BETWEEN THE DEVIL AND MILES DAVIS By Lance Tooks 75 Pages, NBM Publishing, $15.75 “A pair of ghost giants/Keep me up nights with endless protests/Writing and Moaning in my ears as if there’s a solitary thing that I can do to set them to rest. “If I were brave I’d step off in to the air right now. “Then there’d be three restless souls loose.” From Between the Devil and Miles Davis Say, "comic books" and most folks think 32 page pamphlets featuring the four color adventures of tight-and-cape-wearing white guys flying around and beating each other up. Since the 1960's that has been the dominant vision sold and promoted by the comic book industry (not withstanding Giant Annuals or Black Panther, Luke Cage, Storm, Blade and the Milestone Crew, which some might argue are but Black versions of the same pre adolescent male power fantasy. However since the 1970's graphic novels—longer some times book length publications--have presented comics as serious art-- like Lance Tooks' Between the Devil and Miles Davis. Lance Tooks is a longtime comic book professional. He has been assistant editor at Marvel comics, his comics have appeared in Zuzu, Shade and Girltalk. http://www.lancetooks.com/ Between the Devil and Miles Davis is the fourth volume of his series Lucifer's Garden of Verses that, according to his publisher, NBM Publishing http://www.nbmpub.com/ feature "the fictional character Lucifer". The heroine of Between the Devil and Miles Davis is Amo Tanzer, a chain smoking "hard-bitten and cynical" bi sexual bi racial New York journalist who is "procrastinating at her next assignment, writing on Miles Davis". After some Manhattan style journalist's adventures she winds up in a mysterious bar called the Smokery. The rest of the book is a sometimes surreal conversation, presented in short separately titled sections, between her and Narcissa, the bar owner a black female character featured in Tooks' graphic novel Narcissa, about the life and art of Miles Davis their own lives, attitudes, hopes and frustrations. Fans of Eric Jerome Dickey, Spike Lee, Jules Feiffer, the late Richard “Grass” Green, Los Bros Hernandez’ and Harvey Pekar should like this book. The art ranges from the cartoony to the realistic and detailed. The writing is wry, culturally racially and politically conscious and so literate that you have to read it as closely as you do a novel. This would be a perfect comic for The Village Voice. I most enjoyed "Acquanetta v Jack Johnson". In that section Narcissa tells Amo the story of how her mother, an actress “in the years Before Spike” fought a losing battle to get more blacks into the film industry (was the little fascist director “who shot a film a year in the city yet refused to hire blacks for any positions in his productions” Woody Allen?) With this work as well as others Tooks no doubt seeks to make the comic form palatable to a broader audience and broaden the tastes of the comic audience. I applaud his efforts, those of NBM Publishing and others in the comic industry who strive to make comics worthy of consideration as serious art. Chris Hayden . Email submissions or queries to mywriteword@swbell.net. Snail mail submissions to S~NLG P.O. Box 4506 St. Louis, MO 63108 Click on the url below to visit the Sisters Nineties blogspot http://www.sistersnineties.blogspot.com/
|